Executive Style

The 20 trends to avoid in 2010

David Prestipino
March 25, 2010
What was I thinking? The affects of some of the world's worst alcohol crimes. <I>Graphic: Liam Phillips</i>

What was I thinking? The affects of some of the world's worst alcohol crimes. Graphic: Liam Phillips

WINESTEIN UNCORKED

When I floated to the office the idea of a column on what wine trends should never again enter the mainstream, it quickly transformed from a top 5 list to something like a top 20 in the space of a tweet.

Talk soon turned from bad wine trends to spirits and, predictably, beer - for which everyone has an opinion.

So in the interests of those who whine about wine, and to encourage audience participation, let's cover all drinks. First, the top wine crimes:

TOP 10 WINE TRENDS TO AVOID IN 2010

1. Mixing OJ and bubbly
Why ruin a good glass of fizz with orange juice? Just serve half a glass on its own, and leave the OJ to those who really need the taste. Same goes for Midori and bubbly. Eeek!

2. Having ice with white wine
Not even on the hottest of days is this allowed - unless the wine is under $5. It ruins the taste and looks stupid. Sink your feet into an ice bucket if it's that hot, and sink your palate into the real flavours of the wine. Spritzers excepted.

3. Sparkling v champagne
Champagne is the bubbly that comes from the region of Champagne only, in France. That $12 bottle of Jacobs Creek is not.

4. Red wine with lemonade/coke/water
The only people allowed to do this are Italians - usually with their own home brew because it was made in 1986 and there's still heaps of flagons in the shed.

5. Pouring a bottle straight away
Wine is full of rich, complex intense flavours. You need to let it breathe/decant before it's at its optimum. I don't need to explain the concept of foreplay here, but it's the same thing essentially.

6. Hibiscus flowers and strawberries
Sure it looks fancy mixed with bubbly at those B-list parties but, c'mon... They go to waste and then we're left to dispose of them on the floor when no one's looking.

7. Small wine glasses
We've come a long way in recent times in realising that wine evolves better and quicker in bigger glasses (see point five). But some restaurateurs still insist on serving top-notch wine in those archaic, shapeless 200ml things. Open up!

8. Drinking wine too cold
The colder your white wine, the less flavour it will impart on your palate. Most whites are drunk way too cold. The more expensive whites should be taken out of the fridge and drunk about 15 minutes later. Try it - you'll find the flavours are more robust. The same rule can apply for heavily-flavoured, Belgian-style beers.

9. Cheap New Zealand sauvignon blanc
There's such an over-supply of this NZ grape, particularly from the Marlborough region, that people are confusing good value with good wine. If you really want to try a cracking sauvignon blanc from NZ, give the Cloudy Bay Te Koko a ride. Then try going back to drink that $15 crap.

10. Being scared
It might seem unnatural, but swirling and sniffing your wine (in a big glass) will make the experience of drinking it doubly enjoyable. Get into it, don't worry about looking like a wine snob. Or of spilling some on your clothes. Embrace what's in your glass and let it fly open to your senses.

10 MORE TRENDS TO AVOID IN 2010

1. Shandy (beer and lemonade)
While I don't agree with this one, die-hards out there believe beer should be drunk as just beer. Those like me who are partial to beer and lime in the morning (to get through the hangover) should also beware.

2. Alcohol-free beer
Need we say more? Buy a ginger ale or something if you don't want the alcohol. Bundaberg is pretty good.

3. Goon
Sure Goon of Fortune was a way to score a pash in your teens but there's so much great-value wine out there today that buying a four-litre cask of Coolabah (or Passion Pop for that matter) should never enter your head.

4. Rubbish Aussie beers
Someone in the office takes great offence to Fosters and VB - yet drinks Tooheys Extra Dry like it's going out of fashion. Aussie draught beers have lost touch with their more fancied boutique friends like Little Creatures and James Squire.

5. Blue Curacao
It resembles blue Listerine and is used in cocktails. Looks like a dream, tastes like a nightmare and, like Celine Dion, should be banned from the earth.

6. Guinness
While I can't endorse this suggestion (it came from the same person who LOVES Tooheys Extra Dry), I must admit Guinness in a can or bottle is about as awful as drinking bad medicine.

7. Addington Draught
Apparently this is the beer of choice in Addington, Christchurch. One colleague described it as "someone pissed on the floor, and another bloke swept it up and put it into a keg". Sounds delightful.

8. Umbrellas in cocktails
They were cool when you were little, because you had something to play with while mum and dad got boozed. Now they just get in the way and look like something from The Love Boat.

9. Stone's Ginger Wine
This might have been popular back in Rotto [Rottnest Island] in 1990, but it's hideously sickly and more than just a little '90s.

10. Southern Comfort and Canadian Club
The only time I've felt the room spinning the next day was after drinking Southern Comfort. And the only times I find myself brawling with my brothers, is when we're all on the Canadian Club. No can do.

If you've got a trend you think we need to avoid, comment below or email me here.

Follow Winestein on Twitter by clicking here.

87 comments so far

  • Ordering spirits whilst eating in a restaurant. Especially if it's a bourbon and coke or cosmopolitan.

    Commenter
    Renee
    Date and time
    March 25, 2010, 12:21PM
  • There always seems to be some new and fancy way to drink bubbly. As a kid the OJ and bubbly combo was a favourite of my mum and aunties at family gatherings. I'm with David, just drink half a glass. Or perhaps it was to hide the taste of the nasty cheap bubbles!

    More recently it's been the hibiscious flowers. I bought a jar and never used it. It's probably still lurking in the back of my fridge.

    Most recently it's been the bubbly with guava juice.

    I don't mind a champagne cocktail but if it's paired with fruit just make sure the fruit doesn't overpower the actual wine.

    Commenter
    Winelover
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    March 25, 2010, 1:39PM
  • Mate, there is nothing wrong with a VB to quench a hard earned thirst.

    Commenter
    Wolfman
    Location
    Perth
    Date and time
    March 25, 2010, 1:35PM
  • A few points on beer:
    Australians tend to drink all ales and some lagers too cold, not just belgian beers.
    A shandy is an abomination. if you don't like the taste, don't drink beer. It's the same as your sparkling with OJ comment. Drinking fruit with your beer is also a no-no it started as a trend to try to sterilise crap beer. Some people think they are trendy drinking Hoegaarden with lemon. it's just tacky. Have a lemonade if that's what you really want.
    Also i hope you realise James Squire is also owned by Toohey's now? And is also poisoned with corn/sugar adjuncts?

    maybe you should stick to talking about wine...

    Commenter
    jiffy
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    March 25, 2010, 1:57PM
  • I agree with all of the above comments except for the Canadian club.... that's the only drink I can drink all night and NOT get a hangover.
    If you want to stop street violence stop selling rum.....
    Alcohol fuelled violence I don't think, more like rum related violence

    Commenter
    hates_rum
    Date and time
    March 25, 2010, 1:54PM
  • David, you may need to add another to your list. Hot drinks such as latte's, cappuccino, flat whites and hot chocolates should not be consumed after 6pm, especially after dinner. Why do we think that we need this to complete our dining experience!!

    Commenter
    PC
    Location
    Northcote
    Date and time
    March 25, 2010, 2:12PM
  • Look, I love a fine glass of wine and french champagne (not sparkling) but when it comes to a party, a passion pop punch with a bit of caskwine always goes down a treat. Also as West Australians our roots are with those two, they were a key beverage choice of growing up and with a jazzy new label, Passion Pop might be making a comeback

    Commenter
    DG
    Location
    Perth
    Date and time
    March 25, 2010, 2:19PM
  • "Sparkling v champagne"? Seriously, who cares what it is called? (Apart from the French, whose national sport is getting offended at the way their culture is being ruined/stolen/both by ignorant foreigners.)

    Commenter
    Dave
    Location
    Canberra
    Date and time
    March 25, 2010, 2:12PM
  • I feel compelled to add this to the list as I have seen people try and pull this out at all occasions, once even in a restaurant (!). Jager Meister and anything at any time should be banned from 2010. After working at a bar for the majority of 2009 I have probably served 16,000 Jager Bombs to young and old and the results are in; you look stupid doing it and then you act stupid after it. But at a restaurant? Seriously??

    Commenter
    Ethel
    Location
    Mount Lawley
    Date and time
    March 25, 2010, 2:11PM
  • I thought this would actually be an informative and educational article on wine do's and don'ts. Like when to drink whites and when to drink the reds from the date they were bottled. Because I think they are different depending on the the type of wine.

    Instead I get someone who obviously did a lot of research into the topic.

    Commenter
    Annabelle
    Date and time
    March 25, 2010, 2:28PM

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